The Beat: A True Account of the Bondi Gay Murders (28 page)

Read The Beat: A True Account of the Bondi Gay Murders Online

Authors: I.J. Fenn

Tags: #homicide, #Ross Warren, #John Russell, #true crime stories, #true crime, #Australian true crime, #homosexual murder, #homosexual attack, #The Beat, #Bondi Gay Murders

Once the recording equipment was rolling, the video and audio machines capturing Trindall’s every word and movement, Constable Harrison conducted her introductory questions: the offences of interest to the police all occurred in 1989, did he understand; his answers could be used in a court of law, did he understand; did he understand the questions so far?

Trindall’s answers were short, truncated and sounded a little arrogant: ‘yep’, he understood, ‘yep’. He gave his age and address, spelled his surname and waited, sitting relaxed in the uncomfortable chair, for the real stuff to start. He didn’t have to wait long.

‘Are you familiar with the Marks Park or Mackenzies Point area in Bondi,’ she asked.

‘I am now.’

Constable Harrison put the photograph on the table between them, described where Bondi Beach was, traced it with her finger, traced the walkway to Tamarama, pointed to the park. ‘This is Marks Park,’ she said. ‘And this is the area we’re looking at.’

‘Okay.’

‘So, have you ever been to Marks Park?’

‘No, but I’ve used a track around from Bondi to Coogee –’

‘For what?’ Detective Dagg cut in, what did you use it for?

‘Training.’

‘When would you have used that?’ Harrison resumed. ‘Do you remember?’

‘Frequent over the last 10 years, but. Through our training with football.’

‘Did you know Marks Park was a gay beat? Y’know?’

‘No.’

‘Do you know what a gay beat is?’

‘No, I didn’t.’ Sounding like he didn’t really understand the question properly, was still a question behind. ‘I didn’t know it was a gay beat. I didn’t even know what the name of the park was, so.’

‘Okay,’ Harrison decided she’d spell it out. ‘A gay beat, you know they call it a gay beat, but that’s just where homosexual men go to procure sex.’

‘Okay.’

‘It’s well-known that, well, that park, where people who know it, know of it to be that.’

‘Okay.’

She pushed another photograph across the table, a monochrome shot of a young man, clean, a little dated. Ross Warren, she said. ‘Have you ever seen him before?’

Barely a glance. ‘No.’

‘Okay, he is the one, he disappeared in Marks Park at Tamarama in July 1989 and what happened was – his body’s never been found – but his car was found here,’ a jab of her index finger on the aerial photograph which was still lying on the table next to the smiling image of Ross Warren, ‘– in Kenneth Street. Just abandoned there. And his keys were found down here,’ sliding her finger over the glossy surface of the photo, looking up into Trindall’s face, seeing no change in his nonexpression. ‘But his body’s never been found. But that was 12 years ago so we presume he’s dead.’ A pause, then, ‘So, do you know anything about that?’

‘No. First I’ve heard of it. When you got in contact with me. An’ that’s the first photo I, first time I’ve seen a photo of ’im.’

‘Okay. So, how old would you have been back in 1989?’

‘Seven … 17, I think.’

‘So what were you doing around that time?’

‘Just a kid in ’89 … in the year ’89, me older son Jordan, he’s 12 now. Livin’ with me girlfriend an’ her family. Would’ve been at Stanmore I think, back then. But after that we moved to Alexandria, so … I was doin’ a garbage run. Through Rockdale. It was at Rockdale Council … An’ playin’ junior representative football for South Sydney.’

‘So, did you leave school … at what age would you have…’

‘I would’ve left probably about 16. Yeah, Year 10.’

‘Okay. I’ll just show you the other photos of the people we’re talking about. I’ll show you a photo of John Russell. He’s the guy, we actually found his body down here.’ Finger on the aerial again. ‘Have you ever seen him before?’

‘No, never seen him before.’

‘Okay. So, have you ever heard anything about him?’

‘No,’ he said. ‘No.’

‘Okay. That’s down in the park. Can I just, I’ll show you a picture of David McMahon. He is the gentleman who, this is a picture of him now and … Anyway, he was actually assaulted there in the park and attempts were made to throw him off the cliff. Have you ever seen him before?’

‘No.’

‘Have you ever heard about a David McMahon?’

‘No. Never.’

‘Okay. So, getting to schooling … where did you go to school?’

‘High school? I started, like, at Punchbowl Boys.’

‘Punchbowl Boys?’

‘Done Year 7 there. Left there went to Newtown Boys for two years an’ then I done two years at Cleveland Street. Then I had a big break, probably three or four years, an’ I went an’ done Year 12 at Manly Boys.’

‘Okay. Year 12. Okay.’ Ignoring the fact he’d already said he’d left school at 16, left in Year 10. ‘And who did you associate with when you were at Cleveland Street High School?’

Thinking, thinking back to those times, naming three or four guys … just guys, no trouble. Kids he’d played football with, junior football for Alexandria Rovers.

‘Near Cleveland Street High School,’ Harrison was saying, ‘there’s a park area near there as well.’

‘Yeah, that’s where we trained. Alexandria Park.’

‘Yeah? And are you familiar with the toilet block there, that was on the park?’

‘Yes.’

‘Yeah? And what, what did you know about that toilet block? Anything in particular about it?’

‘Yeah. We knew that, that’s where the gay people usually went around.’

‘What were your feelings about that?’

‘Didn’t really bother us. Didn’t bother me, y’know, so.’

‘Did you ever hear of anybody talking about how it bothered them? Back then, you know, the kids…’

‘No, not really.’

‘Did you have any nicknames back then? Were you known as –’

‘Tricky. I’m still known by that, Tricky.’

‘That’s your only nickname?’

‘That’s it, yeah.’

Following the plan outlined by Steve Page, Constable Harrison moved on to ask about graffiti tags, if he’d been into that graffiti stuff. But he hadn’t. None of the guys he knew did graffiti. And he didn’t go to Bondi, either, not frequently. If he did ever go there, it would have been as a kind of one-off, not regular. He stayed around Waterloo, Redfern, mostly. They all did, hung out around the housing commission, around Unwin Street – unless they went to a Blue Light Disco or –

‘So, do you know an Adam French?’

Trindall shifted his position, leaned his arms on the table. ‘Yes,’ he said.

‘And what about Ron Howard?’

He shook his head. ‘I’d only know Adam French,’ he said. ‘I’ve only probably known him for 12 months or so. He was younger than I am. I only knew him because he probably came up and played a game of footy with us. Ronnie Morgan? I know him

cause he was a student at Cleveland Street.’

‘And what about Alex –?’

‘I remember the name, now that you say that.’

Constable Harrison ran through a list of names: did he know this one? What about …? They were all those convicted for the Richard Johnson murder. Trindall knew them all.

‘Alright,’ the constable said, ‘what I’ve got here, what has sort of led us to come and speak to you as well, is that in a listening device there’s a mention of your name, being involved in a bashing with another group of males. A bashing in Centennial Park.’

‘Yep.’

‘A bashing of a gay male. Can you tell me anything about that? Why would that come up, your name?’

‘The first I’ve thought – heard about that. And I don’t know where that would’ve come from.’

‘Did you ever bash anyone in any group?’

‘We probably have had some fights when we were young,’ he said. ‘And probably being young hoods, sort of hanging around together. But I never went and frequented the gay places like, you know, like you’re saying.’

‘Yes?’ Harrison asked, yes, and what else?

‘Like I said, that one before about being at Alex Park,’ meaning the beat, ‘we knew that because that’s where we trained. We trained at Alex Park. So, if ever we frequented one that would’ve been it.’

‘Okay. So you’ve said previously that you knew that Adam French and that group of boys got in trouble over a murder there in Alexandria Park?’ She posed the statement as a question but didn’t wait for an answer. ‘That was a guy by the name of Johnson. He was murdered there. They … a group of the boys bashed him and were convicted of that and went to jail. What did you ever hear about that? Like, did you know that that’s what they were doing?’

‘I didn’t know,’ he said. ‘We heard straightaway – not straightaway but they sort of got charged pretty quickly over it.’ A pause, waiting. But nothing came. ‘So we also knew what was happening after that – it – happened. But we didn’t know that they actually went out bashing gays and set out on ’em, upon ’em like they set out … set out on that guy … when you, we got all the details on it.’

‘So when would the first you heard of it be? Just –’

‘After it happened. I don’t know who the first one was but one of the guys got arrested and it just spread around our area that there was a lot of them that’s goin’ to get done for it.’

Harrison tapped her pen lightly on the table, drumming thoughts into line. ‘Okay,’ she said. ‘Have you ever heard of the letters PTK?’

‘No.’

‘PTK gang. Like in a gang?’

‘First I’ve heard of that.’

What about PSK, she asked. But no, he hadn’t heard of that either. He’d heard of PIC, he said, Partners In Crime, but he didn’t know who was in it, knew nothing about it, really. Just the tag. Harrison explained PTK and PSK, told him what the letters stood for and asked again if he’d heard the gang names. He hadn’t, had no idea. She pushed a book of photographs towards him, across the table, explaining that the pictures were just a collection put together by the police and asking him to mark any of the faces he might recognise, number the picture and initial it.

Trindall studied the book page by page until he reached the end, page 9. Some people he half recognised, a few he identified with certainty, most were either unknown to him or he only knew a nickname or part of a surname. Those he knew all went to Cleveland Street High School, most lived in the housing commission blocks in the area, one or two played football with him although they weren’t necessarily those whose names he knew.

Okay, Harrison said, was there anything that he could think of that the police might want to hear about any of this stuff: these people, these events they’d discussed?

‘No. Nothin’ really comes to mind. The first I heard about it was the other day when you got in contact with me.’ The people who’d vanished, who’d been killed, this was all new to him, he said. Sorry.

Detective Dagg leaned forward, his elbows on the table. ‘In regards to the suspicious death of John Russell,’ he said, ‘there’s nothing you can tell us? You haven’t heard anything … boys going and doing gay bashings and throwing people over cliffs?’

‘No,’ Trindall said, shaking his head. ‘The first we sort of knew about was after the guys had done the one at Alexandria.’

‘So the lads that you knew very rarely went to the Bondi Beach area?’ Dagg asked.

‘Yeah, very. We all stayed around the Waterloo area. Especially way back then.’

Way back then when people were dying, when they were being tossed like rubbish into the sea. It was only sensible to stay in the Waterloo area. Way back then.

vi

 

Other persons of interest were interviewed on the same day, officers from Operation Taradale coordinating their efforts as best they could to prevent too many warnings being given. One of those interviewed identified 28 people, including herself, who she believed were members of the Bondi Boys. The first on the list was Sean Cushman. He was a quiet guy, she said. Kept to himself. But at school he had a temper. She was in the same year as he was at Dover Heights, they hung around together, but weren’t that close. She was quite happy to give evidence if it was needed, she said, but she didn’t know anything about the Warren or Russell deaths, didn’t know anything about David McMahon’s case. Some of the others might, she suggested, naming one or two of the older boys, but if she was asked who was capable of such offences, she would have to say that she didn’t know of anyone in the Bondi Boys who was involved in gay bashings or robberies in the area. But who did she think could have been involved in bashings and robberies? Well, there was one guy, he was rich, his parents owned a pub…

Another POI was more forthcoming, more helpful. In 1989, he said, he lived in Bondi. Gould Street, Bondi. Went to Dover Heights School. He looked at the nine-page book of photographs and recognised 23 people. They mainly hung out at the beach on Friday nights, Saturdays and Sundays, he said, but they sometimes met during the week, too. They all chucked in cash at the weekends, got an adult to buy booze for them, VB or Fosters usually, then sat in the huts on the beach and got pissed. Now and then they walked up to Marks Park, he said, hung around ’til maybe one in the morning.

Yeah, they’d all sit together, drinking, talking. Sometimes a few of the group would take off – Cushman, Ned Hajdukovic, Poppa, a couple of others. They would take off as a group and come back later telling everyone else what they’d done, how they’d rolled somebody, stolen their stuff. They’d put the money in for more booze but they kept the jewellery and other things for themselves. On one occasion, he said, he was with one of the girls and they were walking along the rocks from Bondi to Marks Park when they met one of the other guys, Jason. Jason had just rolled someone, he said, had a wallet, rings, chains, glasses. He hadn’t known his victim, he said, just bashed him and took his things. Jason was like that, he said, violent, unpredictable. Another time – when he was with Jason outside the ice-cream shop, ‘32 Flavours’, on Campbell Parade – Jason, unprovoked, had kicked a bystander, knocking him to the ground. While the man was lying there Jason kicked him again, in the head, knocking him out. He removed the unconscious guy’s glasses, cigarettes and bumbag. The victim, he said, was gay.

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